Metaplanet’s Bitcoin Hoard: A Tale of Numbers and Nonsense!

In a move that has baffled economists and confused tea leaves alike, Metaplanet has somehow acquired 5,075 BTC in Q1 2026, bringing their grand total to 40,177 BTC-a tidy sum, if you ignore the 2.8% YTD BTC Yield that somehow materialized by March 31.

Metaplanet, that paragon of fiscal restraint, coughed up „63.645 billion to hoard 5,075 bitcoin like a magpie collecting shiny trinkets. At „12,540,793 per coin, one might wonder if they haggled with Satoshi’s ghost-or simply forgot to haggle altogether.

Their total cost basis now stands at „623.37 billion, averaging „15,515,598 per bitcoin. A feat so precise, it’s as if they’d bargained with a mathematician armed with a slide rule and a hangover.

A Marvelous Leap: From 35,000 to 40,000 Bitcoins-A Triumph of Arithmetic!

Recall December’s spectacle? Metaplanet ended Q4 2025 with 35,102 BTC. By Q1 2026, they’d magically summoned 40,177 BTC. Adding 5,000 coins in three months? Child’s play for a company plotting to amass 100,000 BTC by 2026-a goal so ambitious, it’s practically a fairy tale.

CEO Simon Gerovich, that modern-day oracle, took to X (formerly known as “the platform where CEOs shout into the void”) to trumpet their 5,075 BTC acquisition. At „12.54 million per coin, he declared their YTD BTC Yield “a robust 2.8%!”-a figure as clear as a murky pond.

The BTC Yield, we’re told, is a metric that tracks “total bitcoin holdings relative to fully diluted shares.” A metric, in layman’s terms, that measures how many coins you’ve stockpiled versus how many shares you’ve conjured into existence. It’s not profit. It’s not loss. It’s… something in between.

The Income Engine: Where Bitcoin Meets Alchemy

But wait-Metaplanet isn’t merely splurging yen. They’ve invented a “bitcoin income operation,” where they dabble in options sales like a chef juggling knives. This sorcery generated „2.969 billion in Q1, reducing their net BTC acquisition cost. For every bitcoin bought, „585,080 was “offset” by this financial prestidigitation, bringing their effective cost to „11,955,713-roughly in line with bitFlyer’s „11,869,387 average. A coincidence? Or the invisible hand of market forces sipping tea?

Capital Raises: A Theatrical Spectacle of Equity Sales

Q1 also brought two equity sales so dramatic, they’d make a Shakespearean villain blush. On January 29, Metaplanet approved a share allotment at „499 per share-24.529 million shares plus warrants-for „12.24 billion. It concluded February 13, just in time for the cherry blossoms.

Then came March 16’s encore: „380 per share for 107.368 million shares, netting „40.8 billion. A new warrant series debuted March 31, while older warrants were suspended “pending further notice,” which is corporate speak for “we’ll figure it out later.”

The BTC Yield Chronicles: A Metric’s Descent into Obscurity

The BTC Yield, once a proud 95.6% in Q1 2025, has plummeted like a sack of rubles. Q2 saw 129.4% (a paradox?), Q3 dropped to 33.0%, Q4 2025 to 11.9%, and now Q1 2026 limps in at 2.8%. A decline as inevitable as taxes, blamed on “share dilution” and the cruel mathematics of growth.

Yet hope flickers! BTC per share rose from 0.0240486 to 0.0247319, a gain of 876 BTC-worth „9.293 billion at „10,610,570 per coin. A gain, mind you, calculated via a “fixed reference price,” because why let reality ruin a good story?

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2026-04-02 20:37